Steve Tuholski asked:

> 2. A common field sobriety test involves having the person follow the 
> police officer's finger as they move it from side to side.  
> If someone has 
> had too much alcohol, their eyes will "twitch" when the 
> finger gets near 
> the peripheral visual field.  Why does that happen?

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (in the U.S.) has a
pretty extensive website on this.
http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/injury/enforce/nystagmus/hgntxt.html

"There are several types of nystagmus. Alcohol causes two types: alcohol
gaze nystagmus, which includes HGN, and positional alcohol nystagmus.
Although alcohol causes both, alcohol gaze nystagmus and positional alcohol
nystagmus are
very different and easily distinguishable. Testing for positional alcohol
nystagmus is not a part of the standardized field sobriety test battery."


The following is from the NHTSA page referenced above.

********************

Alcohol Gaze Nystagmus (AGN) 

Gaze nystagmus is a type of jerk nystagmus where the eye gazing upon or
following an object begins to lag and has to correct itself with a saccadic
movement toward the direction in which the eye is moving or gazing.7 Gaze
nystagmus is due to disruptions within the nervous system. Alcohol gaze
nystagmus (AGN) is gaze nystagmus caused by alcohol. AGN occurs as the eye
moves from looking straight ahead (called resting nystagmus), to the side
(called HGN), or up (called vertical nystagmus or VGN). The effect of
alcohol on eye movement has been described as follows: 

Alcohol is a central nervous system depressant affecting many of the higher
as well as lower motor control systems of the body. This results in poor
motor coordination, sluggish reflexes, and emotional instability. The part
of the nervous system that fine-tunes and controls hand movements and body
posture also controls eye movements. When intoxicated, a person's nervous
system will display a breakdown in the smooth and accurate control of eye
movements. This breakdown
in the smooth control of eye movement may result in the inability to hold
the eyes steady, resulting in a number of observable changes of impaired
oculomotor functioning."

Positional Alcohol Nystagmus (PAN) 

Positional nystagmus occurs when a foreign fluid, such as alcohol, is in
unequal concentrations in the blood and the fluid contained in semi-circular
canals in the vestibular (inner ear) system. The vestibular system controls
a person's balance, coordination and orientation. The eyes depend on the
vestibular system to stabilize them against any head movements.  Disruptions
in the vestibular system will have an adverse effect on the messages sent to
the eyes when the head moves. Positional nystagmus manifests itself as jerk
nystagmus in which the direction of the saccadic movement depends on head
movement.

Positional alcohol nystagmus (PAN) occurs when alcohol is the foreign fluid.
There exist two types of PAN. In PAN I, the alcohol concentration is higher
in the blood than in the vestibular system fluid and occurs when a person's
blood
alcohol content (BAC) is increasing. In PAN II, the alcohol concentration is
lower in the blood than in the vestibular system fluid and occurs when a
person's BAC is decreasing. 

Nausea, dizziness, vertigo and vomiting accompany PAN I and PAN II, which
indicate high doses of alcohol. High intensity PAN is evident when a
subject's eyes are open, but open eyes block lower intensity PAN. As a
result, PAN is most easily recorded when the subject is lying down, head to
the side with the
eyes closed.

********************


--
Sue Frantz          Highline Community College        
Psychology          Des Moines, WA
206.878.3710 x3404  [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
http://flightline.highline.ctc.edu/sfrantz/



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